Mick Eddy Blends Atmosphere and Emotion on New Singles “Come Over” and “About You”

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For Mick Eddy, music is less a career path than an entire ecosystem — one built from movement, experimentation, and an instinct to turn every experience into sound. The Boston-based singer-songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist officially introduces that world with “Come Over” and “About You,” the first two singles from his forthcoming debut album Strange Weather, a deeply immersive project shaped by years of travel, emotional introspection, and relentless self-discovery.

Entirely self-written and self-produced, Strange Weather arrives as the culmination of a creative process that has been quietly evolving across continents. Raised between the Czech Republic, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates, Thailand, the United States, and the Netherlands, Eddy grew up surrounded by constantly shifting cultures, languages, landscapes, and perspectives. That sense of motion permeates his music. His songs feel cinematic yet intimate, layered with warmth, atmosphere, and subtle emotional tension, as though each track exists inside its own carefully constructed emotional weather system.

The dual release of “Come Over” and “About You” offers listeners their first real entry point into that universe. While both songs live within the same sonic landscape, they occupy entirely different emotional spaces. “Come Over” carries the hazy pull of memory and longing, unfolding through groove-heavy instrumentation, textured guitars, and reflective songwriting that captures the fleeting intensity of a specific chapter in someone’s life. In contrast, “About You” leans deeper into Strange Weather’s introspective core, widening the emotional lens while maintaining the project’s sense of closeness and vulnerability.

Together, the songs introduce an artist whose greatest strength lies in atmosphere. Eddy’s music does not rush to reveal itself. Instead, it slowly unfolds through layered instrumentation, subtle rhythmic details, and production choices that reward repeat listens. There is an unmistakable sense of movement throughout the tracks, influenced as much by late-night drives and changing cityscapes as by classic songwriting traditions.

That balance between precision and emotion may partially stem from Eddy’s unconventional path into music. Before fully dedicating himself to songwriting and production, he studied Electrical Engineering, completing more than half of his degree before ultimately deciding to pursue music full time. The shift eventually led him to Berklee College of Music, where he further developed the technical and creative skills that now define his work. Yet even with formal training, Strange Weather remains fundamentally DIY in spirit. Eddy writes, performs, produces, and engineers the majority of his material himself, approaching each song with the mindset of both a musician and a builder.

That hands-on philosophy extends throughout the album’s creation. Strange Weather was developed alongside a close circle of family and friends, giving the project a collaborative intimacy despite its ambitious scope. Additional engineering support came from Boston-based mixer Mike Midura, while select mastering was handled by Grammy-winning engineer Randy Merrill, whose credits include work with Blink-182, Lady Gaga, Charli XCX, and Kesha. The result is a project that feels polished without sacrificing emotional immediacy — expansive in sound but deeply human at its center.

Musically, Eddy pulls inspiration from a broad spectrum of artists who similarly blur genre lines through mood, groove, and emotional storytelling. Echoes of John Mayer’s melodic fluidity, Tom Misch’s rhythmic warmth, Frank Ocean’s emotional openness, and Anderson .Paak’s instinct for texture and movement can all be felt within Strange Weather’s DNA. At the same time, Eddy avoids direct imitation, instead shaping those influences into something distinctly his own: soulful, atmospheric songwriting built equally for headphones solitude and shared experiences with friends.

Outside of music, Eddy also draws creative energy from film, television, gaming, sports, and technology — influences that subtly emerge in the album’s cinematic pacing and immersive sound design. Songs often feel visual in construction, unfolding scene by scene rather than adhering to rigid formulas. It gives Strange Weather a transportive quality, as though listeners are moving through fragmented memories, conversations, and emotional snapshots alongside him.

As Strange Weather prepares for its full release, Eddy is also building a live band capable of translating the album’s layered sonic world into an equally immersive performance experience. If “Come Over” and “About You” are any indication, Strange Weather will not simply function as a collection of songs, but as an expansive introduction to an artist creating from every corner of his life experience.

With these first releases, Mick Eddy establishes himself as a musician interested less in trends than in atmosphere, connection, and emotional honesty — crafting songs that linger long after they end, like weather systems slowly passing through.

Connect with Mick Eddy via:
Instagram // TikTok

 

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